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The Creator (Hans Zimmer/Steve Mazzaro) (2023)
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Average: 3.37 Stars
***** 53 5 Stars
**** 78 4 Stars
*** 70 3 Stars
** 42 2 Stars
* 21 1 Stars
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Four stars for Hans Zimmer scores
Oswald That Ends Wald - October 1, 2023, at 10:50 p.m.
1 comment  (651 views)
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Co-Composed by:

Co-Composed and Produced by:
Steve Mazzaro

Conducted by:
Gavin Greenaway
Ben Parry

Orchestrated by:
Oscar Senén
Total Time: 43:48
• 1. They're Not People (2:19)
• 2. A Place in the Sky (2:25)
• 3. Where It All Began (4:11)
• 4. Surrounded (2:34)
• 5. She's Not Real (2:13)
• 6. Standby (6:12)
• 7. Missile Launch (3:01)
• 8. Prayer (2:47)
• 9. The Wounded (3:08)
• 10. Lab Raid (4:31)
• 11. Heaven (6:57)
• 12. True Love (3:30)

Album Cover Art
Hollywood Records
(September 29th, 2023)
Commercial digital release only.
There exists no official packaging for this album.
Filmtracks Traffic Rank: #1,875
Written 9/29/23
Buy it... if you have longed for Hans Zimmer and his team to recapture the melodramatic sensibilities of the composer's early years, this score offering three pivotal cues of glorious tonal fantasy not to be missed.

Avoid it... if you prefer artificial intelligence to write your film scores, director Gareth Edwards' joking comments about using fake Zimmer music in this film raising a dangerous idea without forethought.

Zimmer
Zimmer
The Creator: (Hans Zimmer/Steve Mazzaro) With the topic of artificial intelligence all the rage in popular society, writer and director Gareth Edwards embarked upon a mission to create a relatively low budget science-fiction extravaganza meant to make audiences think. With varied results, 2023's The Creator swings above its height in its examination of a future war between mankind and the machines of artificial intelligence. A tough special agent leads a team in the hunt for an advanced incarnation of the artificial intelligence that poses a final threat to all of humanity, finding the unexpected. With no big-name actors, the bulk of the relatively meager budget for The Creator could be spent on the movie's impressive special effects, which often overlaid real vistas as a method of saving money. While initial buzz around the picture failed to live up the promotional hype attempted by the studio, the project didn't require massive returns to be considered a success. The lesser budget also had a notable impact on how music was employed in the film. Edwards littered the picture with song placements, choosing affordable options that left comparatively little room for an original score. The director had intentionally desired the initial edits of the movie to exist with only sound effects and no temporary score, stating that this technique meant that "you're not hiding behind music to save the storytelling." This strategy seemingly informed Edwards' tact when considering the final score, which accompanies surprisingly little of the long film. More controversially, he also revealed that he had originally hired a company that produces music via artificial intelligence to yield a fake score in the style of Hans Zimmer. Disturbingly, he rated the results a "7 out of 10" and toyed with the idea of working that music into the movie as something of an artificial intelligence-related prank on audiences. Sadly, this revelation was completely tone-deaf given the concurrently striking Hollywood artists worried significantly about how artificial intelligence could replace them in the future. Zimmer himself has been the target of discontent involving sampled musicians in the past, complicating the whole situation.

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